'Aladdin': 25 Things You Didn't Know About The Disney Classic

It's hard to believe it's been 20 years since Disney's "Aladdin" first opened. When it hit theaters back in 1992, it became the highest-grossing movie of the year.

To celebrate the film's 20th Anniversary, we've unearthed 25 things you might not know about the Disney classic. From other actors who were considered for roles, to the rapper who inspired Aladdin's style, let's take a look back at some of the lesser known facts about the film.

1. John Candy, Steve Martin, Eddie Murphy, Martin Short, John Goodman, and Albert Brooks were all considered at one point to provide the voice of the Genie.

2. Voice actor Frank Welker provided the chattering sounds of Abu, just as he did for the Nazi monkey in "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and TV's Curious George. He also voices Scooby-Doo.

3. In early character sketches, Aladdin resembled Michael J. Fox. However, Disney honcho Jeffrey Katzenberg suggested they make Aladdin into more of a "hunk," by aging him from 13 to 18 and taking off his shirt. Their new inspiration: Tom Cruise and Calvin Klein models.

9. Linda Larkin, who voices Princess Jasmine, was nearly fired and had to re-audition for the role halfway into the film after Katzenberg thought she didn't sound "regal" enough.

10. Film critics Siskel and Ebert refused to allow their likenesses to give would-be suitor Prince Achmed a thumbs down in the film, so directors Ron Clements and John Musker put in caricatures of themselves instead.

13. You've probably heard the rumor that when Aladdin is on Jasmine's balcony, he says, "Take off your clothes." However, he is talking to Rajah the tiger and actually says, "Good kitty, take off and go, go on." The dialogue was changed to "Down, kitty" on the DVD.

14. Williams's morphing genie owes a lot to Bugs Bunny. As he told Jules Feiffer in a 1996 interview, "I [was] basically mak[ing] a Warner Brothers cartoon in Disney drag... like where all of a sudden Bugs is with James Cagney, or he's running from Peter Lorre. That's why, in 'Aladdin,' I did Jack Nicholson and Robert De Niro and William F. Buckley. I threw in everything. I think they just wanted me to do a straight voice, but the first day I said, 'Can I try something?' And they said, 'Oh, all right.'"

15. Williams improvised 16 hours of material in his recording sessions. The Academy reportedly turned down the script for Best Adapted Screenplay consideration because so much of it was improvised.

16. Williams agreed to voice the Genie at union scale rate (which came to $75,000) on the condition that his voice not be used for merchandising and that the Genie not take up more than 25 percent of any advertising. The Genie became the most popular character and Disney violated the agreement. A furious Williams refused to promote the film and was replaced in the direct-to-video sequel "The Return of Jafar" by "The Simpsons" Dan Castellaneta. Disney CEO Michael Eisner bought Williams an original Picasso as an apology, which Williams refused. But it wasn't until Katzenberg was fired that Williams accepted a public apology made by new studio head Joe Roth. Williams returned for the second sequel and went on to do several other Disney features.

17. One of the reasons Williams didn't want to emphasize his involvement in the film was he also had the holiday movie "Toys" coming out. It ended up tanking with a mere $23 million to "Aladdin"'s $217 million.

19. WIlliams also voiced the street merchant at the beginning of the film, who was originally going to be revealed as being the Genie in disguise. ''People in previews saw Jasmine and Aladdin kiss and started getting up,'' Clements told EW, so the reveal was cut.

21. Arabic Americans took offense to the line "where they cut off your ear, if they don't like your face," in the opening song "Arabian Nights," so the lyric was changed to "where it's flat and immense, and the heat is intense."

22. In the preview screenings, no one clapped after the songs, so the animators added an "Applause" sign at the end of "Friend Like Me." It worked and the sign stayed in the movie.

23. Sure, you spotted Pinocchio, but did you also spot The Beast (He's one of the animal figures the Sultan is stacking) or Sebastian from "The Little Mermaid?" (The genie pulls him out from a cookbook.) There's also a hidden Mickey head when the tiger kitten transforms, if you freeze frame.

24. The Goofy hat and Hawaiian shirt that the Genie wears at the end of the film is a nod to Williams's wardrobe in a short he did for the Disney/MGM Studios tour in the late '80s.

25. Scott Weinger, who voiced Aladdin, told one story so many times -- of how Williams made him laugh so hard that he fell off his chair -- that he couldn't remember if it had really happened or not. But as he says on this podcast, "In the DVD extras, you actually see it happen, so that's pretty cool."